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Strange Maps

A murder map of Denmark

Lovers deadlier than gangsters, first comprehensive Danish homicide study since 1970s shows

Image: Dagbladet Information

X marks the spot: a quarter century of murders in Denmark
Key Takeaways
  • Danes love tv crime, but rarely commit (and barely study) murder
  • The typical Danish murder involves knives and relatives, study reveals
  • Wealth of stats can help forensic scientists – and lawmakers
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A geographic representation of all 1,417 murders committed in Denmark from 1992 to 2016.

Image: Ruland Kolen / Dagbladet Information

One map, 1,417 murders

Scandinavians love bloody murder. On their tv screens at least: if they’re not binge-watching the latest, locally-sourced Scandi noir crime thriller, they’ll happily re-watch Morse, Vera, Barnaby, Taggart or any other of the mostly British (and strangely often mononymous) homicide procedurals clogging up all channels, any day of the week.

That massive, if passive, interest in killing must somehow serve as an antidote for its active pursuit, because the Nordics are among the least murderous countries worldwide.

In 2017, Denmark had a rate of ‘intentional homicide’ of just 1.20 per 100,000 inhabitants, which is among the lowest in the world (1). Given its relatively small population (5.8 million), that translates to a mere 71 murders that year. The other Nordics have similarly low stats: also in 2017, Finland also had a murder rate of 1.20 (69 Finns finished), in Sweden it was 1.10 (113 Swedes silenced), in Iceland 0.90 (just 3 Icelanders iced) and in Norway 0.50 (28 Norwegians neutralised).

The only major countries doing better than that were Indonesia (0.40, i.e. 1,150 murders) and Japan (0.20, for 306 homicides). The United States trends to the other side of the spectrum (2), with a murder rate of 5.30 in 2017, which translated into 17,284 intentional homicides (3).

With murder rates this low and home-grown crime dramas as popular as they are, it could be argued that there are more fictional murders on screen in the Nordic countries than actual ones. It’s certainly true that the actual murders – outshone and perhaps outnumbered by their fictional counterparts – get less attention.

Objectified information helps forensic scientists transcend their own knowledge of previous cases.

Image: Ralf Roletschek / FAL 1.3

Societal value

Enter Asser Hedegård Thomsen from the Institut for Retsmedicin (Institute of Forensic Science) at Aarhus University. He is conducting the first comprehensive analysis of Denmark’s murder statistics since the early 1970s. For his Ph.D. thesis, to be completed next year, he has spent five years examining each and every one of the 1,417 murders committed in Denmark in the quarter century from 1992 to 2016.

Why? “When autopsying a murder victim, forensic scientists use their own knowledge of previous cases to reach their conclusions. My analysis is helpful because it is objectified information, extending beyond personal knowledge”, Hedegård Thomsen told the Danish newspaper Dagbladet Information, which devoted an entire supplement to his findings.

But there is also a broader, societal value in a close reading of all those autopsy reports, the paper editorialises: “Even if murder is relatively rare here (in Denmark), it remains the ultimate crime against society, and the one that is punished most severely. That’s why knowledge on this topic is so relevant: if murder is to be discussed, prevented or legislated on, it’s important to do so based on facts.”

More chilling than ‘The Killing’: a real-life murder map of Denmark.

Image: Dagbladet Information

X marks the spot

So, what does murder in Denmark look like? According to this map, one X for the location of each murder, a lot like Denmark itself.

Murder density is highest where most people live: first and foremost in the capital, Copenhagen (the white blob, bottom right). Odense (middle, bottom) is also easily visible. Smaller areas of overlapping crosses correspond to other Danish cities such as Esbjerg, Aarhus and Randers.

But killing happens in enough places for the geographic outline of the entire country to become visible. The densely populated islands of Sjælland (on which Copenhagen is located), Fyn (Odense) and Lolland can be clearly discerned. A few murders in Skagen, the northern tip of Jutland, help identify the Danish mainland.

One isolated cross north of Odense seems to indicate a solitary murder on the small holiday island of Samsø. The bunch of x’es to the right represent the island of Bornholm, at greater distance from the rest of Denmark, halfway between Sweden and Poland.

For reference, an actual map of Denmark

Image: CIA / Public domain

Typology of violence

Perhaps more interesting to coroners (and legislators) is the study’s typology of violence and victims.

Stabbing was the most frequent cause of death (33.2%), followed by shooting (22.2%), blunt-force trauma (21.9%) and strangulation (17.6%). Since most murders happen at home, Denmark’s favourite murder weapon is the kitchen knife. Access to guns is strictly regulated in Denmark, otherwise death by gunshot would probably be the larger category.

Familiarity breeds contempt – and worse: 44% of all killings happen within families. No less than 77% of all female murder victims die at the hands of a relative, and just 24% of men. Spousal homicide is the biggest single subcategory of all murders (26.7%), and 79% of its victims are women. In fact, more than half of all female murder victims are killed by their (former) significant other. For men, that figure is just 9%.

The second-largest category are drink- and drugs-related murders. Here, 97% of the victims are male. Gangland killings and other crime-related murders – which receive wide media attention – are a distant third.

Three out of four murders take place at a home (rather than out on the street), two-thirds occur between 6 pm and 6 am, and most happen on a Friday or Saturday. Monday is the least lethal day of the Danish week.

Line up the usual suspects…

Image: Kent Wang / CC BY-SA 2.0

‘Ideal’ victim profiles

Based on the 1,417 murder cases in Denmark from 1992 to 2016, Mr Hedegård Thomsen has established three profiles for the ‘ideal’ Danish murder victims.

  • The average murdered Danish male is between 18 and 50 years old, is killed on a Friday night by a drinking buddy with a kitchen knife, either at his own home or that of a friend.
  • The typical female murder victim in Denmark is between 30 and 39 years old, and is killed at home by her partner or her ex, out of jealousy or because of separation issues. She is either knifed or strangled.
  • Murder victims under 18 years are as often boys as girls, most often killed by a relative – in 75% of cases by their father or another man.

While studying a quarter century of murder must have made for much grim reading, even in a relatively peaceful society like Denmark, there is at least one positive conclusion: the murder rate is dropping to ever lower levels. The annual figures zig and zag up and down, but the trend line goes from just under 80 murders in 1992 to just over 40 in 2016.

This may partly be the result of better care and, thanks to mobile phones, faster reaction times. But other factors may be at work. Perhaps, if the quality of fictional murders on Danish tv keeps increasing, it will be much harder to spot the country’s outline on the homicide map of the next 25 years.


Map from the 24 August 2019 edition of Moderne Tider, a supplement of Dagbladet Information. Text: Line Vaaben, illustration: Jesse Jacob, data: Asser Hedegård Thomsen. Image reproduced with kind permission.

Strange Maps #987

Got a strange map? Let me know at strangemaps@gmail.com.

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  1. Recent estimates for a global murder rate vary from 6.2 per 100,000 (UN, 2012) to 7.6 (Geneva Declaration on Armed Violence and Development, 2004).
  2. But the U.S. is far from the worst offender. In 2017, El Salvador had the world’s highest murder rate: 61.80 (3,942 Salvadorans killed); and Brazil had the highest murder count: 63,895 (and a murder rate of 30.50).
  3. If the U.S. had had the same murder rate as Denmark in 2017 (1.20 instead of 5.30), it would have had just 3,910 homicides, more than 13,000 fewer than the actual total. On the other hand, if the US had had El Salvador’s murder rate, the total would have been 201,531 murders – over 180,000 more.
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